NYC still going after RNC protesters, even harder

Submitted by petey on 30 March, 2008 - 14:44.

i say "still" but of course it's part of the ongoing surveillance expansion, maybe even a "pre-emptive strike" against visitors to minneapolis.

Quote:
When delegates to the Republican National Convention assembled in New York in August 2004, the streets and sidewalks near Union Square and Madison Square Garden filled with demonstrators. Police officers in helmets formed barriers by stretching orange netting across intersections. Hordes of bicyclists participated in rolling protests through nighttime streets, and helicopters hovered overhead.

These tableaus and others were described as they happened in text messages that spread from mobile phone to mobile phone in New York City and beyond. The people sending and receiving the messages were using technology, developed by an anonymous group of artists and activists called the Institute for Applied Autonomy, that allowed users to form networks and transmit messages to hundreds or thousands of telephones.

Although the service, called TXTmob, was widely used by demonstrators, reporters and possibly even police officers, little was known about its inventors. Last month, however, the New York City Law Department issued a subpoena to Tad Hirsch, a doctoral candidate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who wrote the code that created TXTmob.

...

The subpoena, which was issued Feb. 4, instructed Mr. Hirsch, who is completing his dissertation at M.I.T., to produce a wide range of material, including all text messages sent via TXTmob during the convention, the date and time of the messages, information about people who sent and received messages, and lists of people who used the service.

...

Mr. Hirsch said that the idea for TXTmob evolved from conversations about how police departments were adopting strategies to counter large-scale marches that converged at a single spot.

While preparing for the 2004 political conventions in New York and Boston, some demonstrators decided to plan decentralized protests in which small, mobile groups held rallies and roamed the streets.

“The idea was to create a very dynamic, fluid environment,” Mr. Hirsch said. “We wanted to transform areas around the entire city into theaters of dissent.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/30/nyregion/30text.html?ref=nyregion

31 March, 2008 - 05:27

Bad.

31 March, 2008 - 14:37

yes, very.

31 March, 2008 - 17:14

I have some hope the Institute for Applied Autonomy didn't store the TXTmob logs in the first place. If that isn't the case we're talking not hundreds but thousands of phone numbers being handed over.

8 April, 2008 - 12:28

shit me, this could be unpleasant. best of luck to all involved (except the coppers, of course)

8 April, 2008 - 12:42
Quote:
I have some hope the Institute for Applied Autonomy didn't store the TXTmob logs in the first place.

From their privacy page:

Quote:
We use your Personal Information to manage your account and to provide you with the Txtmob services. Changes made through the profile page are immediately reflected in our database. A cell phone number and carrier service provider is required to send messages to your mobile phone.

In order to provide you with thorough and personalized service, Txtmob sometimes uses "cookies" to keep and occasionally track information about you.

When you access Txtmob Web sites, our server automatically collects certain information that is not personally identifiable, such as your IP address, pages viewed, and length of time spent on the Web site. We also archive messages that are sent to Txtmob groups.

So basically, what they have archived is phone number, line provider, IP address, the groups people belong to and all the messages sent by and to them.

8 April, 2008 - 13:30

yup. fucking hell.

8 April, 2008 - 16:35

I'm still not entirely sure that it was the same during the DNC/RNC; I remember quite a bit of conversation around the service...

27 June, 2008 - 19:04

When they make the police state open in these places, I think it appropriate to bring that reality to everyone who puts their head in the sand, and take these occupying demos *also* out into the suburbs and in "upper-class" neighborhoods. And occupy these places, these neighborhoods where the owners and managers live.

Then, when the police state comes to "defend" them, they won't be able to so easily stick their heads in the sand.

Pros and cons, anyone?

27 June, 2008 - 19:10

Petition the ruling class to do what now?